December 22, 2010  |   
                                               
                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                                                             Photo Credit: www.newscorpse.com
                                                                                                                                       
                                   CNN, the once dominant and comparatively respectable  cable news  network, seems determined to destroy whatever shreds are  left of its  credibility. It announced this morning that it will be 
partnering with the Tea Party Express for a Republican primary debate in September of 2011. 
Generally when a media organization chooses to co-host a primary   campaign event it goes with the party apparatus or a non-partisan group   like the League of Women Voters. Tea Party Express is hardly   non-partisan. TPE is a political action committee that has actively   engaged in campaigning on behalf of specific candidates. It supported   Sharron Angle in Nevada, Christine O’Donnell in Delaware and Joe Miller   in Alaska (all lost). It has also been a vocal proponent of Sarah   Palin, who is a speculative candidate for president herself and thus a   possible participant in the debate. It has taken positions for or   against GOP candidates based on their adherence to Tea Party dogma and   helped to defeat GOP incumbents. How can TPE be impartial in a   Republican primary debate?
 CNN’s statement announcing this partnership quoted Sam Feist, CNN  political director and vice president of Washington-based programming,   saying that…
  “The Tea Party movement is a fascinating, diverse,  grassroots force  that already has drastically changed the country’s  political  landscape.”
 “Undecided voters turn to CNN to educate themselves during election   cycles, so it is a natural fit for CNN to provide a platform for the   diverse perspectives within the Republican Party, including those of the   Tea Party.”
 
 That statement ought to outrage members of the Tea Party who insist  they are not affiliated with any other party. It is a statement  that  reduces their views to being merely “perspectives within the Republican  Party.” While TPE may not object to that characterization, I suspect  that many other Tea Partiers would.
 What’s more, the predominantly white organization cannot seriously be  portrayed as diverse or as a “grassroots force.”It was created by Sal  Russo and his Republican PR firm, Russo Marsh,  and its brief history is  fraught with scandal. Rival Tea Party groups  were harshly critical of  it for directing nearly half of the money it raised from citizen  supporters to Russo’s firm. TPE's former  spokesman, Mark Williams, was  forced to resign after publishing a  racially offensive article on his  Web site. That was a particularly  embarrassing episode as the Tea Party  was battling persistent  allegations of racism at the time.
 On the day following CNN’s announcement Williams issued a press release   praising CNN for its decision to embrace Tea Party Express. In the   release he declared himself to have been vindicated and noted that the   CNN relationship was evidence that charges of racism against the Tea   Party were unfounded.
  Williams: “That a respected  international, serious  news organization like CNN and even the potential  presidential  candidates recognize that the Tea Party is anything but  racist simply  thrills me.” [...] I feel completely vindicated, this is  an absolute  vindication of both the Tea Party and Mark Williams.”
 
 This is precisely what makes CNN’s move so reprehensible. TPE  is  using this connection to whitewash its dubious reputation. CNN has  to  know that it is permitting itself to be used for the  political benefit  of an organization that doesn’t even have the respect  of its Tea Party  comrades. When Williams resigned last summer, TPE was  booted from the  National Tea Party Federation and has never been  reinstated. So how is  it representative of the so-called movement?
 The Tea Party’s influence has long been overstated in the media. Poll   after poll shows that it is an insignificant segment of the   population and that its views are wildly out of touch   with the American mainstream and even the Republican Party. But if CNN   were still determined to partner with a Tea Party group it should at   least endeavor to find one without the repugnant baggage of TPE (an   admittedly difficult task).
 It is also notable that Tea Party Express has become a fixture on Fox News.   Fox provided wall-to-wall coverage of the TPE bus tour with reporter   Griff Jenkins riding along. Perhaps Fox would have been an even more   natural fit for partnering with TPE than CNN. After all, TPE was created   by a Republican PR firm and Fox is the communications arm of the   Republican Party. If nothing else this underscores the transparent   dishonesty of portraying the Tea Party as anything other than an   affiliate of the Republican Party. How else can it justify playing an   official role in the GOP primary debate?
 But far worse is the damage this does to CNN, an already wounded   critter. This is an unprecedented partnership between a news   organization and an active political action committee that has already   taken sides in the debate. Would CNN ever consider partnering with   MoveOn.org for a Democratic debate? I think not. And prior to this news,   I would have hoped not. Now I would suggest that MoveOn give CNN a  call  just to see how fair and balanced it is.
 What might have have prompted CNN to make this unholy alliance with a discredited and over-hyped entity? Undoubtedly CNN’s new president Ken Jautz   had something to do with it. Jautz, who took the reins at CNN in   September, was previously in charge of its sister network HLN. It was   there he made history by giving Glenn Beck his first job in  television.  In hiring Beck he praised the radio shock-jock as being “cordial,” and  “non-confrontational.”  That should have been a warning sign that Jautz  might not be a suitable  choice to run a news network. Jautz has always  been more interested in  ratings than journalism, and the Tea Party deal  imparts a disturbing  vision of the direction he intends to take CNN.
 Earlier this year ABC News tried to hire smear artist Andrew Breitbart   as an election analyst. The public outcry (and Breitbart’s  own  prickly personality) resulted in Breitbart getting thrown to the  curb.  That should serve as an example that we can have a positive  influence  on these sort of decisions. Everyone who who cares about  ethical media  and fair elections should let CNN know this is  inappropriate and  unprofessional. You can use this form on CNN’s Web site   to tell it that it should not be partnering with Tea Party Express  or  any right-wing wing PAC (or left-wing for that matter). You can also   Tweet CNN at http://twitter.com/cnn. Use the hashtag #NoCNNTP.
Mark Howard is an artist and author and the publisher of 
News Corpse. His political and socially disruptive artwork has been displayed internationally.
                                                             
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